10 words you're not using correctly

80,591 views ・ 2019-01-10

English with Alex


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Hey, everyone.
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I'm Alex.
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Thanks for clicking, and welcome to this lesson on ten words you are probably not using correctly.
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So, just like the title says, I will look at ten words that most people think they know
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the meanings of, but really you might not.
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So, this video is intended for people whose first language is English or advanced speakers
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who are studying the language.
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Let's not waste any more time.
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Here we go with number one.
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"Bemused".
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"Bemused" means: Perplexed, puzzled, bewildered.
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Most people confuse it with the word "amused", so it does not mean amused.
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Sentence example: "The plot left me feeling bemused."
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If you watched a confusing movie, the plot was weird, strange, difficult to understand
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- it puzzled you, it perplexed you, it left you feeling bemused.
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Now, if you watch a comedy, that leaves you amused.
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All right.
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Let's continue to number two.
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"Cliché".
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This one usually comes down to pronunciation.
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So, "cliché" is actually a noun; it is not an adjective.
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The adjective version is "clichéd" with the little "d" at the end.
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So, you can say: "Hollywood blockbusters are full of clichés" - noun.
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But if you want to use the adjective: "His acceptance speech was so clichéd."
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All right?
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So, make sure: If you want to say something is or was clichéd, that you're using that
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"d" at the end; and if you want to say something is full of clichés, you're using the noun
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in that case.
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Let's move on to number three.
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"Disinterested".
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This means unbiased or not influenced by selfish motivation.
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It does not mean uninterested, as if you're not interested in something.
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For example: "Professional referees need to be disinterested."
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So, a hockey referee, a basketball referee, a football referee - they need to be disinterested;
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unbiased.
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Also think of a supreme court judge - they cannot have bias.
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We need a disinterested judge or a disinterested party; a mediator.
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And the use of "uninterested": "I'm uninterested in sports", if you're not interested in sports,
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for example.
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All right, here we go.
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Number four.
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"Enormity".
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This means extreme evil; not enormousness.
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Yes, "enormousness" is an actual word in the dictionary.
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For example: "We cannot accept the enormity of child labour!"
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The extreme evil of child labour.
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And here we have "enormousness": "The enormousness of the pyramids must be seen to be believed",
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not the "enormity".
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All right?
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The enormousness - the size.
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Let's move on to number five.
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"Fortuitous" - this means unplanned or coincidental.
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It does not mean lucky or fortunate.
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For example: "We ran into a fortuitous obstacle" - an unplanned problem; something you didn't
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plan for, and that was a coincidence when you were doing your project.
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And here we have "fortunate": "We were fortunate to qualify for the tax rebate."
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So, we were lucky or fortunate.
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Let's move on to number six.
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"Noisome".
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This means smelly.
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It doesn't mean noisy.
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For example: "The noisome fish market gave me a headache."
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So, I'm walking in the fish market, the smells are so strong, so powerful that I start not
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feeling well and I got a headache.
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Now, it is possible to say: "The noisy fish market gave me a headache", but here, the
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cause is the noise; the volume of the people talking, and selling, and buying in the fish
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market.
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So, remember: "noisome" - smell; "noisy" - hearing.
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Let's move on to number seven.
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"Nonplussed".
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This means stunned or bewildered; shocked, if you will.
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It does not mean unimpressed.
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It sounds like it would.
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"I am nonplussed" - not impressed.
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But it means I am stunned.
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Okay?
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So, for example: "The witnesses were nonplussed by the accident."
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They were stunned, bewildered by the accident.
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Or: "She was unimpressed by the play."
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So, if you're...
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You can be nonplussed by a play as well if it's very shocking, like "12 Angry Men" - excellent.
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You can feel nonplussed after that; there are some shocking, you know, revelations there.
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But you can also be unimpressed by a play or a performance.
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Whew, nonplussed.
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Let's continue with number eight.
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"Refute".
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This means to prove something to be false.
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It does not mean to allege or argue that something is false.
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It means to prove it without the shadow of a doubt.
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So: "The lawyer refuted the defendant's story."
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The lawyer proved that the defendant's story was a lie.
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Proved that it wasn't true.
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So, next time you want to use the word "refute" in an argument or a conversation: "I refute
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your point" - no, no, no.
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You want to prove that it's false, that's when you use "refute"; if you want to argue,
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you can say: "I'm going to argue against that point."
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All right.
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We're almost there.
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Number nine.
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"Hung".
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This is the past of the verb "hang".
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Now, "hung", in the past simply means something is suspended.
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It does not mean that someone is suspended by the neck until dead.
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This, you use "hanged".
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There's a great Sherlock episode that makes this distinction; the BBC one.
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So, for example: "I hung your picture on my bedroom wall."
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That's an example.
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And next: "The prisoner was hanged in the morning."
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So, remember: "hung" - objects, paintings, pictures, notices; and "hanged" - by the neck
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until dead, so criminals and prisoners.
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Well, criminals because prisoners could be innocent, too, I guess, so...
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Anyway, all right.
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Number 10.
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"Simplistic".
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This means naively or overly simple; something that a child could do, or draw, or create.
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It does not mean simple or pleasingly simple.
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Here we have the examples: "I hated the plot!
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It was too simplistic."
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Like, a child could have made that story.
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Think of a child's drawing of a person - that's a simplistic way to draw a human with stick
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figures.
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And "simple": "We liked the house's simple design."
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It was pleasing to the eye, so it was a nice, simple design.
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All right, everyone, so those are all ten words that you might not be using correctly;
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but after this video, maybe that would change.
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So, if you'd like to test your understanding, make sure you got everything - you can check
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out the quiz on www.engvid.com.
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While you're there, don't forget to check out, you know, the thousands of other videos
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that we have on there right now.
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And check out the other teachers; we have a lot of talented people working at engVid.
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So, thank you very much for that.
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And before I go: Please don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel; ding that bell; and
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to your questions, if you have them.
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So, thank you very much, everybody.
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Till next time-I don't know why I'm looking left and right-thanks for clicking.
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